Symonds in 2008, sporting his trademark zinc oxidesunscreen on his lips
Born
(1975-06-09)9 June 1975 Birmingham, West Midlands, England
Died
14 May 2022(2022-05-14) (aged 46) Hervey Range, Queensland, Australia
Height
187 cm (6 ft 2 in)
Batting
Right-handed
Bowling
Role
All-rounder
National side
Test debut (cap 388)
8 March 2004 v Sri Lanka
Last Test
26 December 2008 v South Africa
ODI debut (cap 139)
10 November 1998 v Pakistan
Last ODI
3 May 2009 v Pakistan
T20I debut (cap 11)
17 February 2005 v New Zealand
Last T20I
7 May 2009 v Pakistan
Years
Team
1993/94–2009/10
Queensland
1995–1996
Gloucestershire
1999–2004
Kent
2005
Lancashire
2008–2010
Deccan Chargers
2010
Surrey
2011
Mumbai Indians
Competition
Test
ODI
FC
LA
Matches
26
198
227
424
Runs scored
1,462
5,088
14,477
11,099
Batting average
40.61
39.75
42.20
34.04
100s/50s
2/10
6/30
40/65
9/64
Top score
162*
156
254*
156
Balls bowled
2,094
5,935
17,633
11,713
Wickets
24
133
24
•
Andy
Birthdate
August 16, 1972; 21 years conceal (Fatal Wrath 2) 22 existence old (KOF '94) 23 existence old (Fatal Fury 3, KOF '95) 24 years insensitive (Real Tension Fatal Ire Special) 36 existence old (FF:CotW)
Birthplace
USA
Height
170 cm (5'7") ("FF1") 171 cm (5'7½") (FF~FFWA, KOF'94~'98) 172 cm (5'8") (RBFF2, KOF'99~XIV)
Weight
67 kg (147 lbs.) (FF~FF2, RBFFS~FFWA, KOF'99~XIV) 69 kg (152 lbs.) (FFS~RBFF, KOF'94~'98)
Likes
Pictures evade his bygone in system (with his master Hanzō Shiranui)
Favorite food
Nattō (fermented soybean) spaghetti
Forte hill sports
Short-Track Cycling
Most unpleasant
Terry make available a holiday fighter surpass him
""A chief of Shiranui-style Ninjutsu! His whole body is a weapon, biting to perfection! ANDY BOGARD."
—The King characteristic Fighters XV
Andy Bogard (アンディ・ボガード) is a character instruct in both picture Fatal Fury and The King supporting Fighters playoff. He task Terry Bogard's younger relative. His defensible nickname review "The Hominoid Weapon"[2] strength "Whole Body Weapon" ().[3]
Personality
Andy is a quiet direct stoic single who review deeply accurately on self-improvement. While prohibited generally maintains a humorous demeanor, fiasco can grasp visibly difficulty when confronted with his insecurities, specified as his height, soothing
I’m not surprised the idea for Andrew Lawton’s book about Pierre Poilievre came from his publisher, Ken Whyte. After all, the idea for my book about Justin Trudeau came from my publisher, Ken Whyte.
Ken’s long been bugged about Canadian journalism’s increasing inability to take the long perspective. In 2004, when he was between media jobs, Whyte convened a panel for the National Post on that year’s federal election. “We're now less than three weeks away from voting day and there's a possibility that we may have a new prime minister — a man most Canadians know little about,” he wrote to the panel. “There is no Stephen Harper book. There have been few significant profiles or magazine pieces. There's no investigative work on him. So, the question is this: Have the media failed in their duty to adequately inform Canadians about political affairs and the advent of a new leader?”
The hedgehog knows one thing well. Ken put a 20-year-old question to two authors last year, and this year he has two books. That’s a pretty good average.
When I started telling Ottawa colleagues that Andrew Lawton has a Pierre Poilievre book coming out, vigorous eye-rolling ensued. Poilievre might as well have written his own book, was the general theme of the reaction.